RI/FS Field Sampling Plan


Book Description




Christlob Mylius


Book Description




Woodbridge Army Research Facility RI/FS; Volume 1. Field Sampling Plan


Book Description

U.S. Army Woodbridge Research Facility (WRF) was used in the past as a major military communications center and a research and development laboratory where electromagnetic pulse energy was tested on military and other equipment. WRF is presently an inactive facility pursuant to the 1991 Base Realignment and Closure list. Past investigation activities indicate that polychlorinated biphenyl compounds (PCBs) are primary chemicals of concern. The WRF is presently in the process of being turned over to the United States Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) to be used as a wildlife refuge and training facility. This task calls for provision of the necessary staff and equipment to provide remedial investigation/feasibility support for the USAEC BRAC Program investigation at WRF. The scope of work includes Focused Feasibility Studies, Remedial Investigations, Feasibility Studies, ecological assessments, risk assessments, proposed plans, RODs, and community relations support. This Field Sampling Plan contains a description of the site, sample location rationale, technical approach to field operations, site safety procedures, and methods for ecological assessments, analyses of samples, data management, and disposal of investigation-derived wastes. Information contained in other plans which accompany this submittal is identified.




Field Sampling Methods for Remedial Investigations


Book Description

Originally published in 1994, the first edition of Field Sampling Methods for Remedial Investigations soon became a premier resource in the field. ThePrinceton Groundwater course designated it as one of the top books on the market that address strategies for groundwater well installation, well completion, and groundwater sampling. This long-awai




Jefferson Proving Ground RI/FS Samplimg Design Plan


Book Description

The purpose of this Sampling Design Plan is to provide a plan for the field sampling and laboratory analysis to be performed in support of Remedial Action/Feasibility Studies (RI/FS) at Jefferson Proving Ground (JPG), Madison, Indiana. Included in this plan are activities designed to fulfill the requirements of a Screening Site Inspection (SSI). This plan is intended to be a guide that incorporates specific rationale and objectives for each sampling and analysis activity, sampling protocols and procedures, data and document management, and data interpretation and evaluation. Also included are logistics and schedule for the proposed RI field activities.




Jefferson Proving Ground, South of the Firing Line RI/FS Sampling Design Plan


Book Description

The purpose of this Sampling Design Plan is to provide a plan for the field sampling and laboratory analysis to be performed in support of Remedial Investigation/Feasibility Studies (RI/PS) at Jefferson Proving Ground (JPG), Madison, Indiana. Included in this plan are activities designed to fulfill the requirements of a Screening Site Inspection (SSI). This plan is intended to be a guide that incorporates specific rationale and objectives for each sampling and analysis activity, sampling protocols and procedures, data and document management, and data interpretation and evaluation. Also included are logistics and schedule for the proposed RI field activities. The sections that follow describe in detail the field-investigation activities for sites identified at JPG that are known or suspected to have released hazardous contaminants to the environment and that may pose a threat to human health or the environment. As described in the Technical Plan (Volume I), several of the sites at JPG require additional information on the type(s) and extent of contaminants. This plan addresses the sampling design and procedures to be used to meet the objectives identified in the Technical Plan. Figures are included that show the proposed sampling locations, and corresponding tables are included to identify the sample number, type, and required analyses. Sections describing general equipment decontamination, sample handling, data and document management, logistics, and schedule follow the discussions of individual site field activities. Results of the field-investigation activities outlined in this document will be used in the evaluation of: the presence or absence and relative concentrations of reported or suspected contaminants at identified waste sites, the vertical and lateral extent of contamination, and the potential pathways for the migration of contaminants within the environment.




Jefferson Proving Ground RI/FS Technical Plan


Book Description

The purpose of this Sampling Design Plan is to provide a plan for the field sampling and laboratory analysis to be performed in support of Remedial Action/Feasibility Studies (RI/FS) at Jefferson Proving Ground (JPG), Madison, Indiana. Included in this plan are activities designed to fulfill the requirements of a Screening Site Inspection (SSI). This plan is intended to be a guide that incorporates specific rationale and objectives for each sampling and analysis activity, sampling protocols and procedures, data and document management, and data interpretation and evaluation. Also included are logistics and schedule for the proposed RI field activities.







Field Sampling Methods for Remedial Investigations


Book Description

Originally published in 1994, the first edition of Field Sampling Methods for Remedial Investigations soon became a premier resource in this field. The "Princeton Groundwater" course designated it as one of the top books on the market that addresses strategies for groundwater characterization, groundwater well installation, well completion, and groundwater sampling. This long awaited third edition provides most current and most cost-effective environmental media characterization methods and approaches supporting all aspects of remediation activities. This book integrates recommendations from over one hundred of the most current US EPA, State EPA, US Geological Survey, US Army Corps of Engineers, and National Laboratory environmental guidance and/or technical documents. This book provides guidance, examples, and/or case studies for the following subjects: Implementing the EPA’s latest Data Quality Objectives process Developing cost effective statistical & non-statistical sampling designs supporting all aspects of environmental remediation activities, and available statistical sample design software Aerial photography, surface geophysics, airborne/surface/downhole/building radiological surveys, soil gas surveying, environmental media sampling, DNAPL screening, portable X-ray fluorescence measurements Direct push groundwater sampling, well installation, well development, well purging, no-purge/low-flow/standard groundwater sampling, depth-discrete ground sampling, groundwater modeling Tracer testing, slug testing, waste container and building material sampling, pipe surveying, defining background conditions Documentation, quality control sampling, data verification/validation, data quality assessment, decontamination, health & safety, management of investigation waste A recognized expert on this subject, author Mark Byrnes provides standard operating procedures and guidance on the proper implementation of these methods, focusing on proven technologies that are acknowledged by EPA and State regulatory agencies as reputable techniques.




Field Sampling Methods for Remedial Investigations


Book Description

This book is a guide to the development of an effective field sampling program as well as to Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) and technical information for many of the most effective remedial investigation methods. The book focuses on intrusive investigation techniques, but non-intrusive techniques such as aerial photography, surface geophysics, and surface radiological surveying are also addressed. SOPs have been provided for those sampling techniques that do not require specialized academic training, such as soil, sediment, surface water, groundwater, and drum sampling. For more specialized investigative techniques, such as underground drainage surveying and some types of soil-gas surveying, information is provided to help you understand how the technique works and under what conditions it can be used most effectively. The book also addresses: equipment decontamination; sample preparation, documentation, and shipment; health and safety; and management of investigation-derived waste. Emphasis is placed on those methods and procedures that have both proved themselves to be effective and are acknowledged by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as reputable techniques.